12 February 2009
Economics Update
Well, the obvious lede here is the weekly initial jobless claims, which dropped 8000 to 623,000, still well within OMFG territory, and the four-week moving average, which is to my mine a better and less noisy metric, jumped from 583,500 to 607,500, while continuing claims rose to 4.81 million.....Ouch.
We have some more numbers for the real estate bloodbath too, with the NAR reporting that median home prices declined in Q4 of 2008 by 12.4% as compared to Q4 of 2007.
Foreclosures fell in January, but this is largely because the GSEs have put a temporary moratorium.
More telling is the fact that foreclosures and short sales accounted for 45% of sales in Q4.
Mortgage rates are down this week to 5.16%, which is still above the 4 and change percent from last month, so I do not expect this to do much to the market.
We do have a bright spot, with , it was +1% over December as opposed to the expected -.8%, but look as the chart on the right shows, it's still very grim.
It's worth noting that some of the increase is because retail gasoline prices have been trending higher (bottom chart), which along with increased spending for food and for clothing, were largely responsible for the increase.
In currency, the Yen and the dollar strengthened as investors fled to their relative safety, and in energy, oil fell below $34/bbl on high inventories and low demand.
We have some more numbers for the real estate bloodbath too, with the NAR reporting that median home prices declined in Q4 of 2008 by 12.4% as compared to Q4 of 2007.
Foreclosures fell in January, but this is largely because the GSEs have put a temporary moratorium.
More telling is the fact that foreclosures and short sales accounted for 45% of sales in Q4.
Mortgage rates are down this week to 5.16%, which is still above the 4 and change percent from last month, so I do not expect this to do much to the market.
We do have a bright spot, with , it was +1% over December as opposed to the expected -.8%, but look as the chart on the right shows, it's still very grim.
It's worth noting that some of the increase is because retail gasoline prices have been trending higher (bottom chart), which along with increased spending for food and for clothing, were largely responsible for the increase.
In currency, the Yen and the dollar strengthened as investors fled to their relative safety, and in energy, oil fell below $34/bbl on high inventories and low demand.
Labels:
Currency
,
Economy
,
employment
,
Energy
,
Finance
,
Inflation
,
Real Estate
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